With allegations of ``conflict of interest,'' and possible 
``blackmail'' of U.S. allies in Saudi Arabia hitting Richard 
Perle, the head of the chickenhawk-loaded Defense Policy Board, 
the neo-conservative hatchetmen in the press are trying to stop 
the exposes about ``Clean Break,'' the 1996 policy paper that 
Perle wrote for Benjamin Netanyahu, that mapped out war against 
Iraq, Syria, and Iran, and abrogating the Oslo Accords.		
				
			The neo-con line is that anyone who questions Clean Break is 
an ``anti-Semite.'' 
But most of Perle's defenders are on the same 
neo-con foundations' payroll. Among the freakouts: 
March 13: in the Moonie Washington Times, columnist Tony 
Blankley lunges after NBC's Tim Russert for asking Perle about 
Clean Break and the Israeli stake in Iraq war during a Feb. 23 
interview. ``If such a respectable citadel of the establishment 
as Russert's Meet the Press can air such a question, we could 
expect worse....'' But Blankley is not an objective observer; he 
was Newt Gingrich's chief of staff, when Gingrich was being 
courted by IASPS, the think tank that wrote the Clean Break. 
On 
March 12, the Moonie Times trotted out Shoshona Bryen, a director 
of the Likud-linked JINSA group, that infiltrates military 
networks, to screech about Rep. Jim Moran's (D-VA) attack on 
American Jewish support for the Iraq war. 
Also March 13: the ``liberal'' Washington Post, partially 
owned by Sharon intimate Lally Weymouth (daughter of the late 
Katy Graham), has a long character assassination of Moran, for 
having called on ``leaders of the Jewish community [to]...change 
the direction'' of the Iraq war policy that they are supporting. 
Quoting all neo-con outets: the National Review, the New 
Republic, and the Weekly Standard, Kurtz also freaks out about 
Patrick Buchanan, who just launched a magazine called American 
Conservative and wrote about Clean Break. But, it is doubtful 
that the freakouts will stop the exposes of the neo-cons -- every 
day, more ``citadels of the establishment,'' including the London 
Financial Times, and ABC's Nightline, are questioning the roots 
of Bush's insane policy. 
[source: House Appropriations Committee hearing, March 13] 
POWELL COMPELLED TO DENY THAT PRO-ISRAEL `CABAL' 
IS INFLUENCING ADMINISTRATION POLICY. 
Secretary of State Colin Powell was invited 
to depart from normal procedure 
at an appropriations hearing today, 
to respond to allegations about Israeli influence 
on U.S. policy toward Iraq. 
Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Az), raised the issue in his opening 
statement, citing Robert Novak's column, the Washington Post 
"Blaming the Jews" editorial, etc. He asked Powell to respond, 
even before any other opening statements were made, or before 
Powell delivered his prepared testimony. 
"U.S. policy with respect to Iraq is not just something that 
has been developed in the last month or so; one can go back many 
years to the end of the Gulf War," Powell responded, outlining 
one version of the history of the past 12 years of Iraq policy 
(but without mentioning that Wolfowitz, Libby et al. elaborated 
their policy of preventive war about 12 years ago). 
Powell said 
that "we have a comprehensive policy for the region, and strategy 
with respect to Iraq has derived from our interest in the region 
and our support of the U.N. resolutions over time." 
"It is not driven by any small cabal that is buried away 
somewhere, that is telling President Bush or me or Vice President 
Cheney or Condi Rice or other members of our administration what 
our policies should be...." 
"So this is not just the result of a few individuals who are 
running loose, as some suggest, but it's a comprehensive policy 
developed over the years, over several administrations...."